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July 22, 2009 PITTSBURGH – The
American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania and Project Vote filed a lawsuit today on behalf of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now
(ACORN), a community organization comprising more than 20,000 working families
in Pennsylvania
that utilizes voter-engagement strategies, like voter-registration campaigns,
as part of its work to strengthen low- and moderate-income communities.
The lawsuit charges that a Pennsylvania
law unconstitutionally restricts ACORN’s right to conduct
voter-registration drives by effectively prohibiting it from using paid
canvassers.
The Pennsylvania statute at issue makes it a crime to
“give, solicit or accept payment or financial incentive to obtain a voter
registration if the payment or incentive is based upon the number of
registrations or applications obtained.” While the law could be
read to prohibit only paying people per registration submitted, the Allegheny
County District Attorney’s office has applied the law to prohibit an
organization from using flexible productivity standards and goals to manage
paid canvassers. In May, District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr. charged
several ex-ACORN canvassers with violating the statute under that theory.
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Today Project Vote is proud to release The NVRA at Fifteen: A Report to Congress, the first
comprehensive report evaluating the implementation of this landmark law.
Written by voting rights attorney Estelle Rogers, the new report evaluates how
four major provisions of the NVRA have—and more importantly haven’t—been successfully implemented:
the “motor voter” program, the mail-in registration form, public assistance
agency registration, and list maintenance procedures.
As Frances Fox Piven, noted voting rights scholar and
activist, explains in her foreword to The
NVRA at Fifteen, “the reform of American registration procedures has met
widespread resistance, some of it attributable no doubt to bureaucratic inertia,
and some of it perhaps politically motivated.” Rogers explains how lack of
enforcement, failures of state and federal leadership, and restrictive court
decisions have left the full potential of the NVRA unrealized, and have left
millions of disenfranchised Americans still awaiting the promise of a truly
inclusive democracy.
This new report is also a call for renewed leadership to improve
the implementation of the NVRA nationwide, recommending practices that states
can adopt to improve their compliance, offering suggestions for legislative
changes Congress could enact, and emphasizing the importance of ensuring that
the Department of Justice finally commits fully to enforcing the NVRA.
To read this important new report, click here.
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On July 9, Project Vote and a coalition of voting rights groups filed lawsuits in Indiana and New Mexico, to compel public assistance agencies in
those states to provide their clients with the opportunity to register
to vote. Today, Project Vote is releasing a new report, Registering Low-Income Voters through Public Assistance Agencies in Missouri, which shows just how well this program can work.
Missouri went from having one of the worst public agency registration rates in the nation to having one of the best through the work of the Public Agency Voter Registration Project, a coalition of voting rights groups to bring states into compliance with the public agency registration requirements of the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA). This new case study explains how this success was achieved, from the first surveys to document the poor performance of Missouri public agencies, through the court order that compelled compliance in July 2008, all the way through to last month's successful settlement of the lawsuit. As a result of this work, public assistance agencies in the state of Missouri went from collecting fewer than 8,000 applications a year to collecting over 100,000 applications in just eight months.
To read this exciting new case study, click here.
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July 9, 2009
CONTACT: Nicole Kovite, Project Vote, 202.546.4173 ext. 303
INDIANAPOLIS, IN – Citing clear evidence that Indiana public
assistance agencies have violated their federally mandated responsibility to
offer tens of thousands of clients the opportunity to register to vote each
year, a coalition of voting rights groups filed suit today against officials in
Indiana for violations of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA).
The suit was filed on behalf of the Association of Community
Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), the Indiana State Conference of the NAACP,
and Paris Alexander, an Indiana resident and Food Stamp Program client who was
not provided the opportunity to register to vote. The plaintiffs are
represented by lawyers from Project Vote, Dēmos, the Lawyers’ Committee for
Civil Rights Under Law (Lawyers’ Committee), the NAACP, and the ACLU of
Indiana, and by the law firms of Miner, Barnhill & Galland and Schwartz,
Lichten, & Bright. Defendants include officials from Indiana’s Family and
Social Services Administration (FSSA), the co-directors of the Indiana Election
Division, and the members of the Indiana Election Commission.
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July 9, 2009
CONTACT: Yolanda Sheffield, Project Vote, 202.546.4173 ext. 302
SANTA FE, NM – Citing clear evidence that New Mexico public assistance agencies and motor vehicle offices have violated their federally mandated responsibility to offer tens of thousands of New Mexicans each year the opportunity to register to vote, a coalition of voting rights groups filed suit today against officials in New Mexico for violations of the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA).
The Complaint was filed on behalf of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), and on behalf of four New Mexico residents who were denied the opportunity to register to vote when they went to a state agency to obtain public assistance benefits or obtain a driver’s license or state identification card. The plaintiffs are represented by voting rights groups Project Vote,Dēmos, and the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (Lawyers’ Committee), as well as by the laws firms of Freedman Boyd Hollander Goldberg& Ives, DLA Piper U.S., and Schwartz, Lichten and Bright. Defendants namedin the suit include New Mexico’s Secretary of State, Mary Herrera, and officials from the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD), the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division, and the New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department.
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